N.L. garbage plan closes dumps, sets targets »

The Newfoundland and Labrador government will close dozens of landfills and spend $200 million to reach a target of cutting in half the amount of garbage heading to landfills in the next eight years. The Robin Hood Bay landfill north of St. John’s will serve most eastern Newfoundland communities. (CBC) The plan which does not include a mandatory recycling component will emphasize three “super-dumps” on the island, with only about 40 smaller landfills remaining open by 2020....

Watchdog bites at Sea Containers

The watchdog has decided to go after Bermuda-based Sea Containers Ltd, in an attempt to secure pensions for 1,376 former and current workers at its UK subsidiary, Sea Containers Services Ltd.

It is issuing its first ever Financial Support Direction, which calls on the SCL parent company to provide financial support for the two retirement funds.

This suggests it will be using its legal powers, if necessary, to force Sea Containers to honour the 91m deficit within its two UK schemes.

This is the first FSD issued since the Pensions Act of 2004 gave the regulator the powers. An FSD is issued if the regulator believes a company is trying to avoid paying its pension.

Other notices could follow soon, since the watchdog is looking into the pensions situation at a number of other companies.

The actions against Sea Containers come as the regulator faces criticism that it should have intervened at , where directors are accused of selling out to private equity giant KKR without safeguarding the interests of pensioners.

In the case of Sea Containers, both the parent company and its British subsidiary have filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the US.

Tony Hobman, chief executive of The Pensions Regulator, said: ‘Our anti-avoidance powers are significant and, as we have always stressed, we will use them proportionately and where reasonable.’

Chasing a firm which is based in Bermuda demonstrates that Hobman is not afraid of reaching to foreign shores to ensure firms don’t shirk their pension responsibilities.

Nicholas Couldrey at solicitors Sacker & Partners, which is acting for one of the Sea Containers schemes, said: ‘This adds significant credibility to the regulator and demonstrates it is prepared to take strong action to protect members’ benefits.’

Sea Containers said it was ‘ disappointed’ at the outcome of the hearing, adding that it takes the pension liabilities ‘very seriously’.

It said it had always expected that any financial restructuring plan would require the backing of the regulator.

Other stories:
MPs press KKR to fund Boots pension
Pensions still sticking point for 11bn Boots bid
Boots pension row hits board
Pensions and retirement Q&A
Does the pension fix add up?

« Supreme Court takes Guantanamo cases

WASHINGTON (AP) Rejecting Bush administration arguments, the Supreme Court reversed course and agreed Friday to review whether Guantanamo Bay detainees can use the civilian court system to challenge their indefinite confinement. The administration argues that a new law strips courts of their jurisdiction to hear detainee cases. The justices took the action without comment along with other end-of-term orders. In April, the court turned down an identical request, although several justices...

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